The health risks of snoring
About 40 percent of men snore, but it may signal health trouble
By Diane Peters
If your guy snores, you know the drill: Wake him up, roll him over and maybe even place a clothespin on his nose (or perhaps you just dream about that part!). But inconvenience aside, compromised breathing during sleep and poor sleep quality due to snoring have been linked to cardiovascular disease, diabetes and mood issues.
About 40 percent of men snore; they’re twice as likely as women to do it. The problem can be made worse by alcohol use, being overweight or having sleep apnea (a condition where breathing stops periodically through the night; it affects up to 10 percent of men.)
“Anyone who snores should have it checked out, because you’re not breathing properly and that’s not healthy,” says David Merrell, clinical director of the Merrell Clinics, which have sleep labs in Calgary and Edmonton. Snorers need a sleep clinic assessment to analyze their night breathing and to determine if the cause is sleep apnea. To prevent snoring, doctors will suggest he sleeps on his side (yes, rolling him over is a good idea), using nasal strips or losing weight (less fat in the airways means more space for air to flow). For chronic snorers or for those diagnosed with sleep apnea, a continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machine, which delivers pressurized air through a mask while you sleep, may be prescribed.
A precursor to heart problems?
A study published in 2008 found that the heart rates of a group of overweight young men suffering from untreated obstructive sleep apnea took longer to return to normal after vigorous exercise, compared to other overweight and regular-weight guys of the same age and with the same sedentary lifestyles who didn’t have sleep apnea. The study shows men who are as young as 18 and have sleep apnea can develop heart problems.
Snoring isn’t sexy
A 2008 study asked about the sex lives of 827 older men who snored to varying degrees. Respondents had similar scores for erectile function and sex drive, but heavy snorers reported the worst sexual satisfaction. “We speculate that heavy snoring may not affect physiologic functions leading to erectile dysfunction, but may affect partner interactions, which can lead to decreased sexual satisfaction,” says Jennifer St. Sauver, a Mayo Clinic epidemiologist who worked on the study.
Another reason to sleep together
A study published in 2008 found that men with sleep apnea whose wives stayed in bed with them rather than sleep in another room used their CPAP machines 74 percent of the nights during the study, while men who slept alone adhered just 43 percent of the time. “Stay together—after all, that’s why you got married,” says Rosalind Cartwright, who conducted the study at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago. And it might just help him stay healthy.
This article was originally titled "Is he a snorer?," in the September 2009 issue of Best Health. Subscribe today to get the full Best Health experience—and never miss an issue!—and make sure to check out what's new in the latest issue of Best Health.
Best Health Magazine, September 2009






































I have been using a CPAP for several years already, and I am amazed at some of the comments posted here. First, I will highlight that a CPAP does what it is supposed to do: help you breathe as you sleep. Before using my CPAP, I would always wake up tired, no matter how long I slept. I would usually have a headache, a sore throat and would feel like a zombie. I would have no energy most of the day and I would fall asleep everywhere: even driving a car which came close to killing me more than a couple of times. Now, I would not even go a night without my CPAP. As for the sound, it is minimal and it is my wife who will tell me to put it on should I doze off without it.. She prefers a light hum than my snoring which will be heard in adjacent rooms and even downstairs...
The CPAP machines do not work.. they are expensive..and agonizing.... they are noisy and the 'patient' can't sleep because of the noise..
As someone noted it is just another way to make money.. and oftentimes the 'patient' (like me) is wrongly diagnosed and for a year I used a machine when that was not the problem. The problem in this wonderful 21st century of medicine has still not been solved!! Advanced - no way.-- we are way behind in Canada! but someone is making a lot of money giving out wrong remedies!
I snore a bit and I've been to a sleep clinic for it. I knew before I even went what they would say and I listened as they went from room to room and repeated the same sales pitch for a CPAP machine to everyone there. If they want to be taken seriously then they need to do more R&D because nobody actually wants a respirator in their bedroom. Even my wife said she'd rather put up with a little snoring than listen to a machine pumping away all night. The science of this whole thing hasn't changed in years, it's just a new spin on an old issue. Still trying to sell CPAP machines to everyone who walks through the door.
Men snoring what about women they do it also and that can cause erectile disfunction.Men lose sleep because the oman snoring next to them.
If your partner snores, just give them a little gentle nudge with your elbow. My wife tells me that I snore, she snores as well, and that's what I do , I give her just a little gentle nudge with my elbow and she stops snoring right away. My wife and I both have heart disease.